Capitolo 88
and it amounts to ethical and formal essays. But in their principals I am
fascinatingly natural and not influences subject. They was understood for the completely
use deprived of children and relatives, or of some beloved pupil that
held the favorite place in the respect of his/her master. They was not drawn
for publication, and so, as the writer was not any right to wait him for that
its words would pass over a limited circle, the Will Etico is a
clear revelation of his/her intimate feelings and ideals. Intellectually
some of these Ethical Wishes are poor; however, morally the general
level is very tall.
Parents' addresses to their children happen in the Bible, the
Apocrypha and the literature of Rabbinical. But the first existing
Will ethical writing as an independent document is that of Eleazar, the
child of Isaac of Worms (approximately 1050) with that it doesn't owe the to be confused
author of the _Rokeach_. The eleventh and twelfth centuries provision little
the Will's Etico examples, but from the onwards of the thirteenth century
there is an abundant order of them. "You don't think of bad", it says Eleazar of
Worms, "for bad thinking leads to doing.... You purify body of thy the,
residence-place of soul of thy.... Gives of every food of thy a portion to God.
You leave that the portion of God both the best, and gives him/it to the poor man." The wish of the
translator Judah Ibn Tibbon (approximately 1190) it contains at least a passage
worthy of Ruskin: "You avoid the bad society, face thy books thy it accompanies, impediment
book-case of thy and shelves are ago thy of the gardening and I like-motivate her. Tear
the fruit that grows therein, gathers the roses, the spices and the
myrrh. If it animates of thy it is satiated and tired, garden changes to make some gardening,
from furrow to plough, from sight to sight. Then desire thies desire renovations
it, and soul of thy is satisfied with delight." The wish of Nachmanides
it is a praise not influences subject of the humility. Asher, the child of Yechiel
(fourteenth century), he/she called his/her wish "Ways of the Life", and it includes